1750 in music

List of years in music (table)
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Events

  • May 1 George Frideric Handel begins the tradition of benefit performances of his oratorio Messiah at and for the Foundling Hospital in London.
  • Farinelli is knighted by King Ferdinand VI of Spain.
  • Ten-year-old Carl Ditters von Dittersdorf begins playing with the Viennese Schottenkirche orchestra.
  • Bach dictates Chorale preludes BWV 666 and 667 to pupil and son-in-law Johann Christoph Altnickol. These are then added to the manuscript of the Great Eighteen Chorale Preludes (BWV 668 is added posthumously).

Classical music

  • 1750 is commonly used to mark the end of the Baroque period
  • CPE Bach
    • Cello Concerto in A minor, H.432
    • Harpsichord Concerto in D major, H.433
  • Nicolas Chedeville – Les impromptus de Fontainebleau, Op.12
  • Francesco Durante – Litania della Beata Maria Vergine in fa minore, a 4 voci
  • George Frederic Handel – Theodora, HWV 68 (Oratorio, premiered Mar. 16 in London)
  • Niccolo Jommelli – Laudate pueri Dominum
  • Leopold Mozart – Partita for Violin, Cello and Double Bass ("Frog")
  • Niccolò Pasquali – XII English songs in score. Collected from several masques and other entertainments... (London)
  • Approximate date
    • Willem de Fesch – 6 Cello Sonatas, Op.13
    • Joseph Haydn – Divertimento in A major, Hob.XVI:5
    • Franz Xaver Richter
      • Symphony in D major, VB 52
      • Symphony in B-flat major, VB 59
    • Filippo Rosa – Recorder Sonata in F major[1]

Opera

  • Johann Friedrich Agricola Il filosofo convinto in amore
  • William Boyce – The Roman Father
  • Baldassare Galuppi – Il mondo alla roversa, premiered 14 November in Venice
  • Johann Adolph Hasse – Attilio Regolo, premiered 12 January in Dresden
  • Niccolò Jommelli – L'uccellatrice, premiered 6 May at the Teatro San Samuele in Venice

Births

  • January 25 Johann Gottfried Vierling, German organist and composer (died 1813)
  • March 23 Johannes Matthias Sperger, Austrian contrabassist and composer (died 1812)
  • August 18 Antonio Salieri, Italian-born composer (died 1825)
  • November Anton Stamitz, German composer (died c.1805)
  • December 3
    • Johann Martin Miller, hymnist and lyricist (died 1814)
    • Johann Franz Xaver Sterkel, composer and pianist (died 1817)
  • date unknown
    • Benoît-Joseph Marsollier des Vivetières, librettist (died 1817)
    • Mikhail Matinsky, Russian mathematician, librettist and opera composer (died c. 1820)
    • Jean Balthasar Tricklir, cellist and composer (died 1813)
  • probable Antonio Rosetti, born Franz Anton Rösler, Bohemian-born composer (died 1792)

Deaths

  • January 4 Christoph Schütz, German music publisher (born 1689)
  • January 29 Sophia Schröder, Swedish soprano at the Kungliga Hovkapellet (born 1712)
  • February 22 Pietro Filippo Scarlatti, Italian organist, choirmaster and composer (born 1679)
  • March 6 Domenico Montagnana, Italian luthier (born 1686)
  • June 2 Valentin Rathgeber, German composer (born 1682)[2]
  • June 14 – Franz Anton Maichelbeck, composer (born 1702)
  • July 28 Johann Sebastian Bach, German composer (born 1685)[3]
  • August John Tufts, American music teacher (born 1689)
  • September 4 – José de Cañizares, librettist (born 1676)
  • September 15 Charles Theodore Pachelbel, German-born organist, harpsichordist and composer (born 1690)
  • September 28 – Johann Sigismund Scholze, music anthologist (born 1705)
  • October 3 Georg Matthias Monn, Austrian composer (born 1717)
  • October 16 Sylvius Leopold Weiss, German lutenist and composer (born 1687)
  • November Giuseppe Sammartini, Italian-born oboist and composer (born 1695)
  • November 11 – Apostolo Zeno, librettist (born 1668)
  • November 15 Pantaleon Hebenstreit, German dance teacher, musician, composer and inventor of the pantalon (born 1668)[4]
  • November 25 – Francesco Feroci, composer (born 1673)
  • date unknown Francesco Goffriller, Italian violin maker (born 1692)

References

  1. Recorder Sonata in F major (Filippo Rosa): Scores at the International Music Score Library Project
  2. Ludger Stühlmeyer: Johann Valentin Rathgeber. Kantor, Komponist und Benediktiner. In: Jahrbuch des Erzbistums Bamberg, 91. Jahrgang 2016. Heinrichs-Verlag Bamberg, June 2015, pp. 5257.
  3. David, Hans T. [in German]; Mendel, Arthur; Wolff, Christoph (1998). The New Bach Reader: A Life of Johann Sebastian Bach in Letters and Documents. New York: W. W. Norton. p. 188. ISBN 978-0-393-31956-9. OCLC 37801400.
  4. Robert Eitner [in German] (1880). "Hebenstreit, Pantaleon". Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (in German). Vol. 11. Leipzig: Duncker & Humblot. pp. 196–197. ... besonders bekannt durch das von ihm erfundene Schlaginstrument, "Pantaleon" genannt, welches er auch selbst spielte ...
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